Restarting A Program After Breaking A Tap

It's common to have to rerun tools. If you find a problem during the program verification with the eighth tool, for instance, you'll want to restart the program from the beginning of tool number eight rather than having to rerun the entire program just to get back to that point.

Columns
From:
8/1/1999
Modern Machine Shop,
Mike
Lynch

It's common to have to rerun tools. If you find a problem during the program verification with the eighth tool, for instance, you'll want to restart the program from the beginning of tool number eight rather than having to rerun the entire program just to get back to that point.

The ability to rerun tools is directly related to how the program is formatted. All information necessary to get the machine up and running (spindle, coolant, offset instating, and so on) must be included at the beginning of each tool command, even for seemingly redundant commands that would carry over from the previous tool if the program is run from the beginning. Most basic CNC courses teach the strict program formatting methods that will allow tools to be rerun. Included in most successful programming methods is an optional stop (M01) at the end of each tool to allow the setup person or operator to easily stop the program to check and see what the tool has done.

While these basic techniques are quite commonly applied, there are circumstances that present special challenges. Most of these cases will require that you consider a change in program formatting. A little ingenuity and foresight can go a long way toward helping you solve tool rerunning problems.

Consider this case of a broken tap: You have thirty holes to tap, but the tool breaks in the third hole. You replace the tap and need to have the control skip the first three holes and proceeding right to the fourth. But you also need the control to read the G84 command in order to have it know how to tap. Here's the program in its original form:

The L0 tells the control not to machine a hole in the current command. It happens to be the word for this particular control that specifies how many holes must be tapped. (Most controls have some way to specify this). It lets us have the control read and understand how to tap holes (from line N170), but no holes will be tapped until line N190. We include the Y position in line N185 since it's not the same as it is when the first hole is tapped. If Z is changed, line N185 would also require the current R and Z values.

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